Twittering Again

I tried out Twitter last year, but abandoned it because it was too distracting.  Now I've decided to give it another go: you can find me there as philipreeve1.  I'm pathetically grateful to anyone who bothers following me, but in order to keep the dreaded blue bird from distracting me from the day job again I've resolved that this time I'm only going to use it for flagging up new blog posts and tumblr sketches, so my tweets will basically consist of lots of links to things like this...



Now I must iron some shirts and things ready for my trip to Oxford on Monday, which I think will be my last public event before the summer holidays.  If you're in the Oxford area, do come and say hello!

Who'll Buy Our Fine Fleeces?


Our two alpacas, Iggy and Alfie, aren't a money-making concern - rather the opposite, in fact - but they'll be being sheared (or is it shorn?) this week, and it seems a shame to let all that fine alpaca wool go to waste.  So the Incomparable Sarah McIntyre has done this lovely advert for them; details here.

Return to Oxford

Oxford may have thought that it had seen the back of me after my event at the Literary Festival in March, but I shall be returning later this month.  I'm doing a talk at Magdalene College School, which is running its own Arts Festival from Friday 24th June to Saturday 2nd July, including all manner of events and an impressive line-up of visiting speakers (and me).  My event will be open to the public, and takes place on Monday 27th June at 4.30pm in the MCS Marquee.  Tickets are £6 adult or £4 concessions.  I'll be talking about all my books, reading from a few of them, answering questions and maybe doing a drawing or two, and there will be a book signing afterwards.  So if you're in the Oxford area next week, it would be great to meet you there!

Doctor Hooey

Dr Who is an odd beast, isn't it?  I've never really been a fan, although I quite enjoyed watching last year's series with Sam.  The current one, which reached a 'mid-season climax' last Saturday, is much harder to like.


A few years ago, when the second Pirates of the Caribbean film came out, I realised that Hollywood producers have now discovered how to make an action movie without any actual story at all, just a series of spectacular set-pieces designed by the stunt men and the special effects team and linked together by something that looks vaguely like a narrative.  Dr Who seems to have taken this approach a step further by cutting out the spectacular set-pieces as well so that all that remains are jokes (often quite good ones, admittedly), sentimental death scenes (at least one per episode as a rule), and odd little sound bites, which I suppose are designed to become catch-phrases or memes or something - the effect is of a huge room at the BBC full of underpaid writers desperately trying to come up with their own version of, 'Hasta la vista, Baby' or 'Do you feel lucky, Punk?".


Saturday's episode - A Good Man Goes To War - began with Rory, one of the Doctor's duo of  companions, striding into a Cyberman spaceship in the middle of a huge Cyberman space fleet and insisting, since they apparently monitor all communications in the region, that they tell him where his missing missus is.  The Cybermen - who were legendary bad-asses in the old Dr Who but seem a bit pants in the new version - are reluctant to tell him, and draw a variety of big space guns.  The rest of the fleet then explodes behind Rory in an expensive (but not quite expensive enough) effects shot, and he says, "Shall I Repeat The Question?" - the first of the episode's sound-bites.

Just shoot him!
So how did he get there?  Well, apparently we don't need to know.  Fair enough.  But how does he blow up an entire space fleet?  How does he get away again afterwards?  Why don't the Cybermen just blast him to bits, winning themselves the undying gratitude of viewers everywhere?


Who knows.  That's just the pre-title sequence and the whole thing has been forgotten by the time the credits have finished, although presumably the Cyber-numpties did furnish him with the information he needed because the Doctor is now busily assembling an army of Trusted Old Friends We've Never Even Heard Of Before to spring Mrs Rory from some kind of secret space base full of fascist clerics.  Among the Doctor's allies, though not revealed until the attack is under way, is a small squadron of Spitfires from one of last year's episodes, who swoop by to knock out a communications array.


So where had they come from?  How did they get from Earth in 1940 to a distant corner of space in the year 9 Zillion?  Had the doctor carried them there in his TARDIS?  How do you get a Spitfire into the TARDIS?  What happened to them after the battle?  Did they survive?  Will he take them home again?  All these questions could be easily covered by a line or two of dialogue, but the scriptwriters completely ignored them*.  And I could go on - there were dozens of similar moments in this series.


Of course it isn't always necessary to explain everything in a story: often we don't need to know how the murderer got in or how the hero travelled from A to B.  Of course it's allowable to include the odd scene or pre-credit hook that doesn't strictly make sense, so long as it's funny or cool.  And of course it's possible to pick holes in any plot if you can be bothered, though it's a fairly pointless pastime.  My problem with Dr Who is that more often than not it seems to be made of plot-holes.  I don't think this is because the writers or producers are incompetent: I think it's because they have an utter contempt for the audience.  Who watches this stuff after all?  Children and fanboys.  So them soundbites and Spitfires, they won't notice that it doesn't make sense.


And the sad thing is that all this money, all this stuff, all these fine actors and pretty costumes could have been used to make a good programme instead.  Buried in all this nonsense there are some lovely bits of dialogue and some great ideas.  Who wouldn't want to watch the story about the sword-wielding Victorian lizard lady detective and her cross-dressing cockney girlfriend?  But Dr Who doesn't really do stories any more, so she's just marginalia, her character compressed into a few lines which you have to strain to catch behind the thundering incidental music.

Speak up a bit, love...
When Terry Pratchett wrote about Dr Who last year he suggested that it should move to Sunday nights since the Doctor was increasingly being portrayed as a sort of replacement Jesus in a bow tie.  Actually, having seen the play Big Daddy versus Giant Haystacks recently, I think the show belongs on Saturday afternoons after all.  In episode after episode we get the same thing: a Baddy appears and does something Bad, or captures one of the Doctor's companions.  The Baddy explains that this time the Doctor is going to meet his doom; he may have won all those other times but this time will be different; this time he's going down.  The companion then gets a speech that goes, "Ooh, just you wait, he's a good man, and he's coming to get you and you can't hide and he'll sort you out all right!"  Then the Doctor arrives. There is a brief and dissapointing confrontation, during which it looks at one point as if our hero will be defeated.  But then he wins.


Dr Who isn't drama at all.  It's the 21st century version of wrestling.


*EDIT: Oops - I'm told that actually there was some reference to the Spitfires, so perhaps I just failed to catch it.  (I made it through five seasons of The Wire without turning the subtitles on, but I often find it nearly impossible to hear what people are saying in Dr Who.) I'm quite sure the opening scene was never explained, though, and there were plenty of other examples.


If campy British sci-fi with good jokes is your thing, you could do worse than check out Toby Frost's Space Captain Smith books: the first one is reviewed here on The Solitary Bee: the second is even better.

A Walk to Wistman's Wood with MSU.


Joyce Herbeck of Montana State University's Children's and Young Adult Literature Course got in touch a few months back to say that she was bringing some students on a field trip to England, and ask if we could meet up.  Well of course we could: I dare say Philip Pullman and chaps like that get sick and tired of having coach loads of readers turning up to quiz them about their books, but it's never happened to me before, so the more the merrier, I say.  Joyce's group have a packed schedule - since arriving last week they've been to the Lake District, Bath and Tintagel among other places, and today they were heading from Cornwall to London via Stonehenge, with a brief stop on Dartmoor.  It would have been nice to have lead them out into the wilds, but there simply wasn't time, so instead I took them to the most Dartmoor-y place I could think of that's within easy walking distance of a proper road; the old oaks of Wistman's Wood, beneath whose gnarled roots the Devil (or Dewer, to give him his Dartmoor name) is supposed to kennel his spectral Wish Hounds. 


There were no Wish Hounds in evidence today - it was much too hot and sunny for spectres of any sort to be hanging around - but I think our guests enjoyed the walk, and a chance to explore the wood.  they'd been reading Here Lies Arthur as part of their course, and had interesting questions to ask.  Frodo and Sam came along and enjoyed being made a fuss of, while Sarah took photos.  Then back to the Two Bridges Hotel for coffee and chat and some excellent, fresh-from-the-oven cookies.  I signed a few books, and Sam even drew a tractor in one.  All in all it was a lovely morning, and I hope the students enjoyed it as much as we did.  Many thanks to Joyce and her colleagues Kim and Judi for setting this up.  I'll look forward to hearing how the rest of their trip goes...

Quirke Almighty!


We had a visitation from the great Quirke himself yesterday.  Nick Quirke is best known for his work with Brighton's Festival Shakespeare Company (he directed their production of As You Like It, which was one of the highlights of this year's festival).  In years gone by he was a stalwart performer in many of the no-budget theatre and movie productions I worked on before I turned to illustration.  By way of thanks I decided to make him a god in the world of Mortal Engines, which is why, in moments of stress, characters tend to say things like "Quirke Almighty!" and "For Quirke's sake!"  Frodo's frisbee made a useful halo.